Narrating the Unspeakable

The use of psychedelic substances has been described as an ‘unspeakable primary experience,’ one that is personal and ultimately indescribable. The ineffable quality of such an experience, however, does not prohibit or invalidate attempts to explain it. The struggle to narrate one’s experience is in...

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Main Author: Shana Harris
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Extreme Anthropology Research Network 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Extreme Anthropology
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/7365
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author Shana Harris
author_facet Shana Harris
author_sort Shana Harris
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description The use of psychedelic substances has been described as an ‘unspeakable primary experience,’ one that is personal and ultimately indescribable. The ineffable quality of such an experience, however, does not prohibit or invalidate attempts to explain it. The struggle to narrate one’s experience is instead an important endeavor. But, how does narration work if the psychedelic experience is truly unspeakable?  What kind of narratives are possible?  What kinds of narrative work do psychedelics foreclose? This article addresses these questions by analyzing narratives generated about the use of psychedelics for drug treatment.  Drawing on 16 months of ethnographic research at drug treatment centers in Baja California, Mexico, this article examines what narration looks like in the context of a psychedelic-based drug treatment modality. It pays particular attention to how people in treatment retell – or struggle to retell – their experiences with psychedelics to make sense of them and then articulate them for the researcher. I argue that psychedelic experiences pose a unique challenge for the anthropological study of these substances, particularly their therapeutic use.  I show how these experiences resist narrativization in multiple ways, presenting both ethnographic and epistemological obstacles to the production of anthropological knowledge.
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spelling doaj.art-94eaa35242e9467899ec6fccdb67f3402022-12-22T01:47:51ZengExtreme Anthropology Research NetworkJournal of Extreme Anthropology2535-32412020-01-013210.5617/jea.7365Narrating the UnspeakableShana Harris0University of Central FloridaThe use of psychedelic substances has been described as an ‘unspeakable primary experience,’ one that is personal and ultimately indescribable. The ineffable quality of such an experience, however, does not prohibit or invalidate attempts to explain it. The struggle to narrate one’s experience is instead an important endeavor. But, how does narration work if the psychedelic experience is truly unspeakable?  What kind of narratives are possible?  What kinds of narrative work do psychedelics foreclose? This article addresses these questions by analyzing narratives generated about the use of psychedelics for drug treatment.  Drawing on 16 months of ethnographic research at drug treatment centers in Baja California, Mexico, this article examines what narration looks like in the context of a psychedelic-based drug treatment modality. It pays particular attention to how people in treatment retell – or struggle to retell – their experiences with psychedelics to make sense of them and then articulate them for the researcher. I argue that psychedelic experiences pose a unique challenge for the anthropological study of these substances, particularly their therapeutic use.  I show how these experiences resist narrativization in multiple ways, presenting both ethnographic and epistemological obstacles to the production of anthropological knowledge.https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/7365
spellingShingle Shana Harris
Narrating the Unspeakable
Journal of Extreme Anthropology
title Narrating the Unspeakable
title_full Narrating the Unspeakable
title_fullStr Narrating the Unspeakable
title_full_unstemmed Narrating the Unspeakable
title_short Narrating the Unspeakable
title_sort narrating the unspeakable
url https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/7365
work_keys_str_mv AT shanaharris narratingtheunspeakable